ECOLOGICAL IMPACTS OF INVASIVE SPECIES. on Native Species and Ecosystems

Similar documents
5 th Grade Ecosystems Mini Assessment Name # Date. Name # Date

Why Should We Care About Invasive Species?

Student Name: Teacher: Date: District: London City. Assessment: 07 Science Science Test 4. Description: Life Science Final 1.

1) Which of the following describes the mammals, fish, birds, and plants that live in an environment? a) Abiotic c) biome b) population d) biotic

3.3 TXT + WKBK answers.docx Page 1 of 5

Ecosystem Review. EOG released questions

Animals: Habitats & Adaptations

The reproductive success of an organism depends in part on the ability of the organism to survive.

Post- Assessment. 1. Duplicate prompt for each student

CBA Practice Exam - Ecology

6. Which of the following is not a basic need of all animals a. food b. friends c. water d. protection from predators

3.3. ? Create an Outline. How Introduced Species Affect Ecosystems. Before You Read. How can introduced species affect an ecosystem?

8/18/ th Grade Ecology and the Environment. Lesson 1 (Living Things and the Environment) Chapter 1: Populations and Communities

Unit 4 Lesson 1 What Are Populations, Habitats, and Niches? Copyright Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company

Groups of organisms living close enough together for interactions to occur.

Academic Year Second Term. Science Revision sheets

Unit 1.1: Ecology. Warm-up Answers:

Page 1. Name:

WE LIVE in a complex world. Many

Living Things and the Environment

Ecology Student Edition. A. Sparrows breathe air. B. Sparrows drink water. C. Sparrows use the sun for food. D. Sparrows use plants for shelter.

Food Chains. energy: what is needed to do work or cause change

What Shapes an Ecosystem? Section 4-2 pgs 90-97

Relationships and Energy within the Ecosystem Study Guide

Directions: For each of the questions or incomplete statements below, choose the best of the answer choices given and write your answer on the line.

Spring 9 Week Assessment REVIEW

Goals: Be able to. Basic conflict: Economic opportunity vs. Environmental quality. Human population is growing exponentially

Competition Among Organisms

Study Guide: Unit A Interactions & Ecosystems

ECOLOGY: the scientific study of interactions of organisms with each other and with their environment

Willow Pond Introduction

Chapter 4 AND 5 Practice

Invasive Species in Your Backyard

3 Types of Interactions

Name: Section: Number:

Food Web and Ecological Relationships Quiz

1.0 Forest Ecology at the Ecosystem Level

Ecology - the study of how living things interact with each other and their environment

Principles of Ecology

SWMS Science Department

Lesson Overview. Niches and Community Interactions. Lesson Overview. 4.2 Niches and Community Interactions

Unit 6 Populations Dynamics

Ecological Relationships

2. Which of the following is an organism that is made of only one cell? A. a larva B. an oyster C. an amoeba D. a mold

Name: Class: Date: Ecosystem Interactions. Multiple Choice Identify the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Education Transformation Office (ETO) 8 th Grade Unit # 6 Assessment

Plant Picture. Date. Observations

6 TH. Most Species Compete with One Another for Certain Resources. Species Interact in Five Major Ways. Some Species Evolve Ways to Share Resources

Unit 2 Ecology Study Guide. Niche Autotrophs Heterotrophs Decomposers Demography Dispersion

HOMEWORK PACKET UNIT 2A. Part I: Introduction to Ecology

BELL RINGER QUICK REVIEW. What is the difference between an autotroph and heterotroph? List 4 abiotic factors in plant growth.

What is wrong with deer on Haida Gwaii?

Community and Population Ecology Populations & Communities Species Diversity Sustainability and Environmental Change Richness and Sustainability

Dave Williams Liz Schultheis Jen Lau

Which of the following is NOT an abiotic factor? A) Rocks B) Soil C) Mountains D) Decomposers

Honors Biology Ecology Concept List

Ch. 14 Interactions in Ecosystems

CHAPTER 14. Interactions in Ecosystems: Day One

8.L Which example shows a relationship between a living thing and a nonliving thing?

Decomposers recycle nutrients (matter) but ENERGY IS ALWAYS LOST

2017 Pre-AP Biology Ecology Quiz Study Guide

4thscience_lifescience (4thscience_lifescience) 4. Which of the following would probably cause the MOST harm to a pond or stream?

Science Grade 4. Unit 1 Healthy Habitats

CHAPTER. Population Ecology

BIO 2 GO! Abiotic / Biotic Factors and Relationships in an Ecosystem

Chapter Niches and Community Interactions

Tolerance. Tolerance. Tolerance 10/22/2010

ECOSYSTEMS. A community of living and non-living things that work together. Have no particular size. Biodiversity is key to a balanced ecosystem

BIOLOGY Unit 2: Ecology Review Guide

a. Identify the genus and species: (1 pt) b. Explain how and why this species was introduced to America: (2 pts)

Lesson Overview 4.2 Niches and Community Interactions

Community Ecology Feral cat populations can be damaging to ecosystems.

Interdependence among Living Organisms and the Environment

A population is a group of individuals of the same species, living in a shared space at a specific point in time.

Grade

Biosphere Biome Ecosystem Community Population Organism

AP Environmental Science I. Unit 1-2: Biodiversity & Evolution

Ecology Test Biology Honors

Unit 2: Ecology. 3.1 What is Ecology?

AP Biology. Environmental factors. Earth s biomes. Marine. Tropical rainforest. Savanna. Desert. Abiotic factors. Biotic factors

Organism Species Population Community Ecosystem

HW/CW #5 CHAPTER 3 PRACTICE

2nd Grade. Biodiversity and Humans.

Visit for Videos, Questions and Revision Notes.

BUNDLE 9: ENERGY AND ECOLOGY Review

1. competitive exclusion => local elimination of one => competitive exclusion principle (Gause and Paramecia)

14.1. KEY CONCEPT Every organism has a habitat and a niche. 38 Reinforcement Unit 5 Resource Book

Populations and Ecosystems. 1. Two different species with the same ecological niche are placed in the same habitat. These two species will most likely

Vanishing Species 5.1. Before You Read. Read to Learn. Biological Diversity. Section. What do biodiversity studies tell us?

Principles of Ecology

Living Things and the Environment

Why do invasive species do so well?

Unit Plan Sketch. Part 1: Topic Content and Objectives

Ecology. Science Matters Chapter 16

1. The graph below represents a change in event A that leads to changes in events B and C.

Natural Selection in Action

What Shapes an Ecosystem Section 4-2

Interactions of Living Things

FOSS California Environments Module Glossary 2007 Edition. Adult: The last stage in a life cycle when the organism is mature and can reproduce.

FOOD WEB. WHY IS THE SUN AT THE BOTTOM? IS THE ALLIGATOR THE LAST LIVING BEING IN THE WEB?

Transcription:

ECOLOGICAL IMPACTS OF INVASIVE SPECIES I. Competition on Native Species and Ecosystems II. Consumption (invasive species eat native species) III. Other deadly impacts on individuals and populations IV. Harm to Ecosystem Functions (alterations in how things used to work together)

invasive shrub Winged Euonymus ( Burning Bush ) What is this plant competing for? bhld.wordpress.com COMPETITION

COMPETITION: What would happen to a rare plant? Japanese Hops Invasive Vine grows over ground and up trees

COMPETITION via INTERFERENCE Why is nothing growing around this Spotted Knapweed? allelopathy

CONSUMPTION Predation animal consumption Feral house cats kill native birds and small mammals enough to reduce populations Herbivory plant consumption

REVIEW: Short Definition of Invasive = (1) and (2). In Britain, non native Eastern Gray Squirrel (from North America) outcompetes native red squirrel for acorns. Also was the source of Squirrel Pox.

DEADLY EFFECTS OF WOOD BORING INSECTS ALB EAB Disrupt sap flow but trees can undergo a lot of internal structural damage first.

OTHER EFFECTS HYBRIDIZATION invasive Eurasian Water milfoil (Myriophyllum spicatum EWM) crosses with native Northern Water milfoil (M. sibiricum NWM) Hybrid Eurasian Water milfoil grows more vigorously than either parent Also, Hybrid is resistant to 2,4 D which is a herbicide used to control EWM If there is a lake with EWM, NWM and the hybrid, what might happen over time to the population of the native NWM? And what might happen to manager s ability to control unwanted watermilfoil with 2,4 D?

HARM TO ECOSYSTEM FUNCTIONING 1 species replaces many WHAT HAPPENS THEN? Japanese Knotweed Phragmites aka Common Reed

BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY Species Richness is one measure of biological diversity. Richness = the number of different species present Many bird species will nest in Phragmites, but the more rare species don t. Imagine a site that gets invaded by Phragmites and one rare species is lost, and one new common species comes in. Then, if we use species richness to measure biodiversity, has bio diversity at this site changed?

What if there were 20 sites across the landscape that got invaded by Phragmites and at each one a different rare species was replaced by a common species. Then taking the landscape as a whole, would there be a change in bio diversity? M

HARM TO ECOSYSTEM FUNCTIONING Crazy Snake Worms 1 2 worm castings soil change in nutrient cycling invasive plant Crazy Snake Worm population increasing 3 4 changed habitat Happy Garlic Mustard? Happy Salamanders? native

HARM TO ECOSYSTEM FUNCTION NUTRIA not in CT but if it were a bit warmer here... COMPETITION FOR FOOD Invasive Nutria consume marsh plant roots HABITAT DEGRADATION Bank caves in erosion sediments in water 2 3 litters/yr w/ up to 13 young each HABITAT LOSS AND DEGRADATAION Nutria fragment continuity of marsh vegetation by denuding vegetation and by creating swimming channels

HARM TO ECOSYSTEM FUNCTIONING Invasive Purple Loosestrife Hungry tadpoles Native Decomposers not used to it. Nutrient cycling in water altered fewer adult woodfrogs fewer baby owls survive

Ecological Impacts of invasive species can be complicated

And you might not see that a problem has been building up until there is a change that you just can t overlook.

JAPANESE BARBERRY Berberis thunbergii red fruits early spring scene Why is Barberry so successful in our forests?

JAPANESE BARBERRY Berberis thunbergii red fruits Lyme Disease spirochete is native Deer tick is native Complications...

the end

Garlic Mustard

herbivory bugs ALB, EAB, HWA, SPB, Gypsy Moth, Deer, Pig rooting HWA/ ALB disrupts sa to needles/ is Bambi invasiv

Bambi s mother causes harm to native plants. Is she an invasive species?

Predation native sawfly larva eating Black Cherry part of good cycle

harm to habitat change in plant species is important because plants form the basis of most animal habitats what do animals need food, shelter, water, space, others of their kind, n fix, ;

ECOLOGICAL IMPACTS on plants, animals, and ecosystems competition resource competition (Eastern Grey Squirrel outcompetes European Red S. invasive plants can overwhelm rare native species and cause them to die for lack of light after they are dead, they may not come back. Extirpation vs Extinction. interference knotweed allelopathy consumption of native by invasive species herbivory predation wood boring insect larvae consume wood ultimately disrupting flow of xylem and phloeum check this Other harm to individuals and/or populations disease deadly effects of wood boring insects loss of local populations (or even entire species) through hybridization Harm to ecosystem functions (alterations in how things work) direct loss of ability to provide habitat usually loss of habitat plant, but rock snot is harm to stream bottom substrate where insect larvae live don t provide food in leaves; or timing long run loss of diversity number of species and difference between common species vs rare indirect/complicated changes PL + wood frogs loss of food source for native plant decomposing organism ultimately affects fish that eat wood frog tadpoles and raccoons and owls that eat adults bio control gone wrong